Friday, May 10, 2013

Bake Day

Every now and then we get motivated enough to bake things in the outdoor brick oven. The Outdoor Oven Project, as it came to be known as, was something that we undertook in 2002 after reading about one that had been built in a nearby village. With nothing more than the basic instructions and drawings included in the book "The Bread Builders" and help from an on-line group of similar minded people, I decided that having an outdoor oven to our cottage at Lac La Nonne was exactly what the place needed. 

"The Bread Builders" book by Alan Scott and Dan Wing includes detailed plans for constructing an outdoor Pizza/Bread Oven



After a 3-4 hour burn the coals are scooped out with a long handled dustpan and oven cavity cleaned of any ash residue. At this point the oven is around 800 degF and perfect for cooking pizza or thin flat bread. Later in the day as the temperature drops to 600 degF bread can be baked. After that, as the temperature continues to fall, anything that can be cooked in a conventional oven can be cooked in this oven. We've cooked pizza, roasts, chickens, whole salmon, baked beans, ribs, muffins, crackers and even a whole turkey. If the oven door is kept closed, to retain the heat between loadings, cooking can take place over the next three days without re-firing. The hardest part is preparing everything to be cooked in this three to four day period.
Today we kept the list short. Four loaves of sourdough bread, followed by pork back ribs in a cast iron pot and lastly, a lemon cake.


600 degrees and 35 minutes later we have sour dough bread. 

A stack of back ribs, BBQ sauce, onions and one can of beer. Enough for six.

Yvonne's glazed lemon cake with real Az lemons

Monday, May 6, 2013

Ice Out, Dock In

With the help of a little wind, the ice seemed to be drifting away and over a couple hours it was gone. 



With bits of ice still floating around me I managed to get the dock into the water before my legs went numb.

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Duck House

Every year Goldeneyes use this over-sized birdhouse in our front yard as a communal egg drop-off station. We've seen up to six birds on or in the birdhouse at the same time. A couple years ago we witnessed a dozen freshly hatched Goldeneye chicks drop to the ground and scramble for the water.



Good to see my newly renovated dock is being used.


Friday, May 3, 2013

Great Northern Loon

This curious fellow kept getting closer and closer while I was repairing my dock today.